HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius says the administration wants a healthcare overhaul this year but is still leaving the details to Congress.

Sebelius said on Sunday that a healthcare overhaul "needs to be owned by the House and the Senate" and won't be dictated by President Barack Obama. She says lawmakers from both parties have good ideas.

Obama has refused to outline specific proposals for his broad healthcare overhaul. Instead, he has left to lawmakers the give-and-take of proposals that comes before a bill is completed.

Sebelius says all options remain on the table, but she said again that someone has to pay for the overhaul.

Sebelius appeared on CNN's "State of the Union."

Earlier, Sebelius announced that the Senate unanimously confirmed Nicole Lurie as HHS' next Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response. Most recently, Lurie served as co-director of the Rand Corp. Center for Domestic and International Security, senior natural scientist and professor of policy analysis at Rand Corp. According to a news release from HHS, Lurie has spent the past several years working with HHS, the Veterans Affairs Department and local health departments on pandemic flu preparedness and other public health issues. She attended the University of Pennsylvania for both undergraduate and medical school, and completed both her residency and master's degree in public health at the University of California at Los Angeles, where she was also a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation clinical scholar.

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